Roadside Assistance — Service #11 of 30
Gas Delivery NYC
Out of Gas? We'll Bring You 2 Gallons
Ran out between stations — or the range estimate lied. We bring gas or diesel to your location so you can get to the pump.
About Gas Delivery
Running out of gas in NYC is embarrassing and dangerous — you usually cannot safely walk to a station from where you stopped. We deliver gasoline or diesel directly to the vehicle. Standard delivery is 2 gallons, which is plenty to get you to the nearest station. Flat-rate call-out covers delivery; the fuel itself is billed at our cost plus a small handling fee. Works on every bridge, tunnel approach, and highway within city limits.
Everything You Need to Know About Gas Delivery in NYC
Gas Delivery is one of 30 services The NYC Towing Service runs across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island, and inside the roadside assistance category it is one of the calls we handle most. Running out of gas in NYC is embarrassing and dangerous — you usually cannot safely walk to a station from where you stopped. We deliver gasoline or diesel directly to the vehicle. Standard delivery is 2 gallons, which is plenty to get you to the nearest station. Flat-rate call-out covers delivery; the fuel itself is billed at our cost plus a small handling fee. Works on every bridge, tunnel approach, and highway within city limits. The reason a dedicated gas delivery line exists — instead of folding the work into a generic tow call — is that the failure mode, the gear, the on-scene procedure, and the NYC-specific hazards are all different. A dispatcher who runs gas delivery every day knows which truck to send, which bridge to avoid, which neighborhood tends to generate this call, and how to price it without surprising the customer at the curb.
New York runs gas delivery differently than the suburbs for a reason. The street grid is narrow, the curb is always contested, alt-side-parking enforcement turns every Tuesday into a game of musical chairs, and weather swings from 95-degree July humidity to a 12-degree February wind chill that kills marginal batteries in their sleep. A suburban operator from Westchester or Nassau who rolls a truck into the city without local knowledge loses an hour just to routing — the gas delivery call that should take 25 minutes becomes a 90-minute call, and the customer eats the lost time in billable minutes or worse, a missed window for a tow to a body shop that closes at 5. Our gas delivery team is staged across the five boroughs on purpose, so we are never the long-haul operator on your job.
Why does gas delivery happen as often as it does in New York? The short answer is density and stress. With roughly 1.4 million registered passenger vehicles plus the daily inflow of delivery trucks, rideshare drivers, out-of-borough commuters, and commercial fleets, the city generates more mechanical events per square mile than almost anywhere else in the country. The long answer is specific to this service. trusted the range estimate and it was optimistic — modern DTE (distance-to-empty) calculations average recent driving and can be off by 20+ miles if you suddenly hit highway speed or hills is the single most common cause we see — it shows up on dispatch logs week after week and accounts for a meaningful share of our gas delivery volume.
driver planned to fuel up at a specific station and found it closed, out-of-service, or the target station was on the other side of a one-way street or exit they already passed is the second pattern we see repeatedly. It tends to hit during specific weather windows or in specific neighborhoods, and it is one of the reasons we stage trucks the way we do. If you have been driving in NYC for more than a year, you have probably either experienced this yourself or watched a neighbor experience it. The difference between "annoying hour" and "ruined day" is almost always how fast the help arrived and whether the operator understood what they were looking at.
gas gauge stuck or the fuel sender failed — the gauge reads higher than actual, and the driver runs dry before the low-fuel warning even comes on is another major contributor. New Yorkers who park on the street long-term see this more than garage parkers, and drivers who commute into Manhattan from the outer boroughs see a different flavor of it. diesel driver accidentally filled with gasoline (or vice versa) and needs the vehicle moved, but first needs to drain and refill with the correct fuel shows up in our logs too — less common than the first two, but when it happens it almost always generates a gas delivery call because the vehicle is genuinely not drivable. EV driver ran out of charge and needs either a tow to a charger or a portable charger to get them enough range to reach a Supercharger (this is a different call but we run it) rounds out the top five. Each of these causes maps to a different on-scene procedure, which is why one-size-fits-all tow operators tend to show up with the wrong truck.
Borough by borough, the causes tilt differently. Manhattan's mid- and high-rise garage population insulates a lot of vehicles from weather-driven failures, but the curbside-parked vehicles on the Upper East Side, Upper West Side, West Village, and East Village see all of it. Brooklyn's mix of brownstone blocks, commercial corridors, and the Belt Parkway shoulder generates a specific pattern — a lot of overnight-park failures in Park Slope, Williamsburg, Bushwick, and Bay Ridge, and a lot of highway-shoulder calls on the Belt and the BQE. Queens is the highest-volume borough for our gas delivery line overall, with the 6.7-mile Cross Island Parkway, the LIE, Grand Central Parkway, and the JFK and LaGuardia approach roads all feeding calls. The Bronx's elevated highways (Cross Bronx, Major Deegan, Bruckner) and Staten Island's hills plus the West Shore and Staten Island Expressway corridors each produce their own patterns.
If gas delivery is happening to you right now, the first thing to do is get the vehicle to the shoulder — if you made it to a shoulder safely, good. if the car died in a travel lane, call 911 first so nypd can protect the scene. Do not try to push through — whatever is wrong, driving on it compounds the damage and often turns a roadside fix into a full tow plus shop time. Get to the safest position you can reach in the next 30 seconds and stop. If you are in a travel lane on the BQE, the LIE, the FDR, the Cross Bronx, the West Side Highway, or any parkway, the shoulder is your goal. If no shoulder exists, call 911 first — NYPD and the NYC Department of Transportation have protocols for exactly this situation, and they need to manage the scene before any tow operator is allowed to work it safely.
Second, call (212) 470-4068 and specify gas delivery with the fuel type (regular, premium, or diesel) — we load the correct fuel before dispatch. Hazard lights reduce the probability of a secondary collision by a meaningful margin, and on NYC highways where closing speeds in the left lane are 60+ mph, that margin matters. If you do not have a reflective triangle or cones, stand at the rear corner of the vehicle on the curb side and wave traffic around — do not stand between the vehicle and oncoming traffic, ever. Keep passengers out of the vehicle if you are on a highway; keep passengers inside the vehicle with seatbelts on if you are on a low-speed side street.
Third, confirm the vehicle year/make/model and tank size — we standard-deliver 2 gallons which is enough for any passenger car; larger vehicles or empty tanks on long-distance trips may need more. The more specific you are, the faster the right truck and right tools get to you. "I'm on the BQE northbound near Atlantic Avenue and the engine died" is useful. "I'm somewhere in Brooklyn and the car won't go" costs the dispatcher 60 seconds of clarifying questions. Give cross streets, the mile marker if you see one, what you were doing when the failure happened, and whether any warning lights are on the dashboard. The dispatcher will read back a truck number, driver name, and ETA before ending the call.
Fourth, do not walk along a highway shoulder to a gas station — the risk is real, and fuel delivery exists for exactly this reason. Driver's license, registration, insurance card, and payment method. If this is a commercial vehicle, also pull the DOT number, company name, and fleet contact. If it is an insurance tow, find the claim number and the adjuster's contact. Getting these ready before the truck arrives shaves minutes off the handoff and makes the invoice cleaner. Fifth, do not have passengers walk either — keep everyone with the vehicle on the curb or guard-rail side. Have a credit card ready for the delivery invoice — fuel is billed at cost plus handling, and the call-out is flat rate
A note on bystander "help" in NYC: if a stranger pulls over and offers to jump your battery, plug your tire, unlock your door, or push you out of a snowbank, default to a polite no. The city has a persistent low-grade problem with bad-faith roadside actors — people who offer a "quick fix" that turns into a demanded cash payment, or worse, a setup for theft. Professional operators have marked trucks, uniforms, a dispatcher on the phone who can confirm our arrival, and licensing that we will show you on request. If someone pulls up without credentials, keep your doors locked, tell them help is already on the way, and stay put.
When we roll a gas delivery call, the truck arrives loaded with the specific gear the job needs — not a generic kit. Sealed fuel canisters with gasoline (regular 87, premium 93) and diesel loaded fresh from a dispatch station before the truck departs is the first item, and it is the one that actually solves the primary problem on most calls. We maintain it in working condition and test it before every shift because a dead battery in a jump-starter or a dry tank on a fuel delivery truck would make the whole trip a waste of everyone's time.
Funnels sized for car fuel fillers — modern anti-siphon fillers need the right funnel or the fuel dribbles out backs up the primary tool, and A portable air compressor in case the tire situation also needs attention (often the 'out of gas' call turns out to be 'low tire plus low gas') handles the secondary situations that turn up on maybe one call in five. Experienced drivers know that the phoned-in description is not always what we find on scene — "dead battery" sometimes turns out to be a bad starter, "flat tire" sometimes turns out to be a broken control arm, "locked out" sometimes turns out to be a dead key fob. The second and third items in the truck's kit cover those cases so the driver does not have to radio dispatch and wait for a second truck with different gear.
A scan tool and basic diagnostic gear in case the car still won't start after the fuel drop — sometimes the fuel pump primed incorrectly or the system needs a cycle and Spill absorbent and clean-up pads for any fuel that splashes during transfer round out the kit for common variations. For gas delivery specifically, the toolkit also includes wheel chocks that hold on a steep NYC grade (every driver has stories from the hills in Riverdale, Kingsbridge, Washington Heights, Staten Island's Todt Hill, and Brooklyn's Park Slope), reflective cones and triangles for scene protection on high-speed roads, and work lights for overnight calls where streetlights do not cover the shoulder you are stuck on.
Every truck in our gas delivery fleet also carries documentation gear — a phone mount, a dash camera, and a digital intake pad for photos and the customer's signature at completion. We photograph the vehicle before we touch it, during the procedure, and after. Those photos live in your service record for 90 days and are available on request if your insurance adjuster, body shop, or attorney needs them. For fleet accounts, condition-report photos are pushed to your fleet portal automatically before the truck leaves the scene.
The most common mistake we see on gas delivery calls is running the tank below empty repeatedly — fuel pumps are cooled by fuel sitting in the tank, and chronic low-fuel running burns out pumps early. Drivers convince themselves the problem will sort itself out, they try to nurse the vehicle to a "safer" spot and make it worse, or they spend 40 minutes trying to DIY a fix before picking up the phone. The city does not reward that patience — parking enforcement, NYPD towing of vehicles in travel lanes, theft from stationary vehicles, and the risk of a secondary collision all scale with time. Calling us at minute 2 instead of minute 42 changes the whole shape of the call.
The second most common mistake is trying to walk to a station on a highway shoulder — nyc highway shoulders are narrow, traffic closes at 60+ mph, and the walk is legitimately dangerous. The city has a persistent pattern of unlicensed operators who listen to police scanners and show up at breakdown scenes to pitch an inflated cash-only service. Real operators have truck numbers, dispatcher confirmation, licensing we can produce on request, and a paper trail. If a truck shows up that you did not call, does not match the one dispatch described, or does not have credentials, keep your doors locked and call dispatch back to confirm.
Third, using a 1-gallon gas can picked up at a convenience store — most modern cars need more than 1 gallon to prime the fuel system and start. Flat-rate is flat-rate. The number the dispatcher quotes on the phone is the number on the invoice unless the scope materially changes, in which case the driver will stop and walk you through the revised quote before proceeding. Fourth, cranking the engine repeatedly before fuel arrives — that drains the battery and leaves you with two problems instead of one. We take photos because they protect both of us. Refusing the photo walkthrough almost always signals a customer who is planning to dispute the charge later, and it makes the driver's job harder. It also means no receipt for insurance.
Fifth, Putting the wrong fuel type in during a self-fill — gasoline in a diesel is a disaster that requires a tank drain and flush before the vehicle runs again A locked vehicle on an NYC curb with hazards on is a theft risk — not because NYC is particularly dangerous but because "hazards on, unattended" reads as "opportunity" to the small number of people who work that opportunity. Sit inside with the doors locked if it is safe to do so, or stay within visual range of the vehicle until the driver arrives.
Pricing for gas delivery in NYC is flat-rate, quoted on the phone before we dispatch, and matched at the invoice. Gas delivery is flat-rate for the call-out. Fuel itself is billed at our cost (whatever the pump price was when we filled the canister) plus a small handling fee that covers the container cycle. Standard delivery is 2 gallons which is enough for every passenger car to reach the nearest station. Larger deliveries (boat trailers out of fuel, diesel trucks, RVs) are quoted based on volume. The total is itemized on the receipt — call-out fee, fuel cost, handling fee — and most customers use the receipt for reimbursement if they were on a business trip when it happened. The one thing that does vary is scope — if we arrive and the situation is materially different from what was described, the driver stops and rebuilds the quote with you before doing the work. "Materially different" means the vehicle turned out to be an AWD when the phone call described it as FWD, or the "flat tire" turned out to be a blown-out sidewall that needs flatbed instead of curbside plug, or the "dead battery" is actually a bad alternator and we need to tow to a shop instead of just jumping. Honest rebuild, itemized.
What affects the flat rate: the type of truck (wheel-lift vs flatbed vs heavy-duty), the distance of the tow (first five miles are included, per-mile beyond), the time of day only for specific calls where the scope legitimately requires overnight or holiday rigging (we do not charge an "after-hours surcharge" just for being awake — that is a national-dispatcher trick), and the specific procedure on the job. We itemize all of it on the invoice. For insurance claim tows we bill the carrier directly where the policy covers it and you pay zero out of pocket.
Methods of payment accepted: every major credit card, Apple Pay, Google Pay, Zelle for established customers, and cash. Receipts are emailed within minutes of completion — the driver sends it before leaving the scene. For fleet accounts we bill net-30 on a consolidated monthly invoice. For insurance claim tows we have direct-bill relationships with Geico, State Farm, Allstate, Progressive, USAA, Liberty Mutual, Farmers, Nationwide, Travelers, and most regional carriers. If your carrier is not on that list we can still help — we collect up front, provide a detailed receipt, and most carriers reimburse on submission.
Here is how a gas delivery call goes from start to finish. Minute zero, you call (212) 470-4068. The dispatcher who answers is the dispatcher who is going to route your truck — not a call center in another state, not an answering service, not a voicemail. In 60-90 seconds we confirm your location (address or cross-streets, the latter works fine), what is wrong with the vehicle, year/make/model, and where it needs to go after service.
Minute 2, dispatch selects a truck. The selection is based on three variables: which truck is closest to you, which truck has the right gear for gas delivery specifically, and which driver has the most experience with your vehicle class. For luxury, exotic, EV, AWD, and motorcycle calls, the selection is tighter because a generalist wheel-lift driver is the wrong call. Dispatch reads you the truck number, driver name, and ETA before ending the call. If traffic has shifted the ETA while you were on the phone, we tell you.
Minute 15-30 (typical window, longer during snow events and major traffic disruptions), the truck arrives. The driver pulls up, confirms your identity and the vehicle, and walks the vehicle with you to document condition. Date-stamped photos go into your service record. The driver explains exactly what is about to happen — which tool is going to touch the vehicle, what the expected outcome is, and what could change the scope mid-job.
Minutes 30-60, the work happens. For most gas delivery calls, the on-scene work is 15-30 minutes. For tows, we load, tie down, and route to the destination. For roadside procedures (battery, tire, lockout, gas), we complete the procedure, confirm the fix, and run a quick post-service check — for example, on battery jumps we verify the alternator is charging before we leave, so you do not run ten miles and stall. At completion, payment processes on the spot, the receipt emails to you, and the service report closes in our system.
End of call, you have a paid invoice in your email, a full photo record in your service history, and the vehicle at its destination or back in working order. If any follow-up is needed — warranty claim on parts we installed, disputed charge, insurance paperwork, lost receipt — you call the same dispatch number. We do not offshore support. The operator who took your call can pull your ticket and answer questions from the same screen.
A few NYC-specific things about gas delivery that national operators miss. Gas delivery calls on bridges and tunnels are coordinated with NYPD or the Port Authority because those structures have strict rules about stopped vehicles — we cannot enter a tunnel with a disabled vehicle until the scene is cleared for emergency work — that is the kind of detail a suburban dispatcher does not know and a local driver knows in their sleep. It changes the routing, the gear loadout, and sometimes the drop-off destination.
The FDR Drive between 42nd Street and the Battery has no gas stations — a driver who enters at 42nd Street running low may genuinely not have another option before a shoulder call is another one we plan around. NYC's bridge and tunnel network shapes every route — the Verrazzano, the Brooklyn Bridge, the Manhattan Bridge, the Williamsburg Bridge, the Queensboro, the Triboro/RFK, the GWB, the Lincoln, the Holland, the Midtown Tunnel, the Brooklyn-Battery/Hugh Carey — each has its own clearance, toll, traffic pattern, and breakdown-response protocol. A driver who takes the wrong crossing loses 20 minutes. A driver who does not know that the Holland Tunnel has no shoulder loses the whole call if a breakdown happens on the wrong side.
Queens and Brooklyn have a denser gas station network than Manhattan — most Manhattan drivers who run out do so on the FDR, West Side Highway, or the middle of a cross-street without nearby stations also shows up repeatedly. If you live or work in NYC, you know alternate-side parking is not a suggestion — it is a tool the city uses to keep the curb moving and the street-sweepers productive. On gas delivery calls, alt-side enforcement creates two patterns: the "plowed-in on alt-side-suspended day" pattern and the "dispatch window has to finish before the 8:30 AM street-sweeper arrives" pattern. Our dispatchers watch the city's alt-side calendar and route accordingly.
Newark Airport access roads and the approaches to JFK and LaGuardia generate steady gas-delivery volume — visitors returning their rental cars sometimes cut it close on fuel, and the rental companies sometimes accept the car anyway but only after a fuel delivery rounds out the NYC-specific awareness. The Belt Parkway has no gas stations on it — once you're on the Belt, you're committed until you exit, and a fuel-delivery call on the Belt is a 20-minute response at best because of the lack of shoulder NYC's five boroughs each have their own personality, their own call patterns, and their own geography. Manhattan's vertical density and garage population, Brooklyn's brownstone curbs and waterfront industrial corridors, Queens's wide-open parkway system, the Bronx's elevated highway grid, and Staten Island's suburban-leaning street network — each one calls for a slightly different playbook on gas delivery, and the dispatcher who takes your call knows which playbook to run.
Weather overlays the whole thing. NYC's freeze-thaw cycle between November and March is brutal on batteries, tires, and cooling systems. The summer's 90-degree humidity turns a marginal radiator into a roadside boil-over. Nor'easters stall traffic for hours and create the "stuck in a snowbank" calls we run through March. Our gas delivery operation is sized for all of that — we do not reduce staffing in winter or bet on "quiet" weekends. The dispatch line is staffed 24/7, every day, every holiday.
Gas Delivery frequently dovetails with other services we run. The most common crossovers are Roadside Assistance, Flat Tire Change / Tire Service, Jump Start / Dead Battery, Mobile Mechanic & On-Site Minor Repairs. If you call us for one and the situation turns out to be the other, dispatch re-routes on the same phone call — you do not have to hang up and start over. For example, a gas delivery call that turns into a tow is handled without a second intake. A call that starts as one service and turns out to need a different truck gets the right truck dispatched with the original service fee credited toward the new job.
Drivers in our fleet cross-train on adjacent services. A driver staged for gas delivery can handle the top one or two related calls on the same truck for most scenarios, which is how we keep ETAs tight. For calls that genuinely need a specialized truck (heavy-duty, low-angle flatbed for exotics, enclosed trailer for classics), we dispatch the right equipment and coordinate the handoff so the customer is not left waiting for a second truck on an open block.
Gas delivery customers are usually drivers who thought they had more range than they did, or whose target gas station was closed or out-of-service, or who simply got caught out by NYC's patchy overnight station coverage. Rideshare drivers are a big segment — the economics of the gig punish over-fueling, so drivers run close to empty and occasionally miscalculate. Commercial fleet drivers on tight routes sometimes get caught between stops. Out-of-town visitors in rental cars who don't know which stations to trust round out the call list. Every call is short, specific, and time-sensitive — get them fuel, get them to a station, done. The profile we see most often is someone who did not plan to need this service today, whose day has already gone sideways, and who needs a clean, fast, non-dramatic resolution so they can get back to whatever they were supposed to be doing. We optimize the whole operation for that — short phone intake, fast dispatch, honest pricing, competent drivers, zero upsell pressure.
The second profile is repeat customers and accounts — fleet managers, body shops, property managers, insurance adjusters, dealerships — for whom this is a recurring operational need and the question is not "is there a tow operator" but "is there a tow operator who documents cleanly, bills predictably, and shows up on time every time." We are built for both profiles. The individual stranded driver gets the same priority routing as the fleet account; the fleet account gets the consolidated invoicing and dedicated account manager that individual callers do not need.
Emergency 101
Quick Tips for Gas Delivery in NYC
The short version of what to do while you wait for dispatch. For the full step-by-step with do's, don'ts, pricing breakdown, and NYC-specific FAQs, see the full Gas Delivery guide. If the situation shifts into something adjacent — a roadside assistance or a jump start / dead battery call — dispatch can re-route on the same phone call.
- 1Get to a shoulder or parking spot. Don't coast in a travel lane if you can avoid it.
- 2Hazards on. If you're on a bridge or tunnel with no shoulder, call 911 first — authority needs to manage the scene.
- 3Call dispatch. Confirm gas or diesel (NEVER guess — wrong fuel in a diesel is a $3,000+ fix).
- 4Stay in the vehicle. Walking to a station on the Cross Bronx or the FDR is genuinely dangerous.
How Gas Delivery Works in NYC
Call Dispatch
Call (212) 470-4068 and describe the situation — where you are (cross-streets are fine), what's wrong, and the year/make/model. 90-second call.
Flat Rate + Live ETA
Dispatcher quotes a flat rate on the call and gives you an honest ETA. Typical arrival 20–40 minutes. Truck number and driver name before you hang up.
Driver Arrives
Driver confirms condition, takes timestamped photos, and walks through the procedure. Nothing happens out of sight.
Done & Receipt
Paid at completion by card, Apple Pay, Google Pay, or cash. Receipt emailed immediately. Insurance billing direct for accident tows.
Frequently Asked Questions About Gas Delivery
The questions we hear most often from NYC drivers calling for gas delivery. Still have questions? Call dispatch at (212) 470-4068 — we answer them on the phone the same way.
How much fuel do you deliver?
Standard delivery is 2 gallons, which is enough for any passenger car to start and reach the nearest gas station. For trucks, boat trailers, and other vehicles with larger tanks and higher consumption, we can deliver more on request. For diesel vehicles we deliver diesel — tell dispatch the fuel type on the call.
What if I have a diesel vehicle?
We deliver diesel on request. Make sure you specify diesel when you call — gasoline in a diesel tank is a serious problem that requires tank drain and flush before the vehicle will run again. We only deliver diesel when dispatch confirms the vehicle is diesel-compatible.
Can you deliver in a tunnel or on a bridge?
Tunnels and bridges have specific rules about stopped vehicles. NYPD or Port Authority has to manage the scene before we can enter. Call 911 first if you're in a tunnel. Bridge shoulder calls are possible but depend on the specific bridge — some have usable shoulders, others don't.
Is the fuel at pump price or higher?
Fuel is billed at our cost (pump price at the station we filled from) plus a small handling fee for the canister cycle. The call-out itself is a flat service fee separate from the fuel. Everything is itemized on the receipt.
What if the car still won't start after I get fuel?
Sometimes a car that ran completely out of gas needs a minute to prime the fuel system after the first small amount of fuel is added. Our driver will verify the vehicle starts and runs before leaving. If the vehicle still won't start, we can tow you to the nearest station or a shop — the fuel delivery fee credits toward the tow.
How fast can you get here?
Typical arrival window is 20 to 40 minutes anywhere in the five boroughs, and the dispatcher quotes a specific ETA before ending the call. Arrival times stretch during snowstorms, major highway incidents, and the tightest rush-hour windows on the Cross Bronx, BQE, and Queens-Midtown approach. Overnight ETAs are often faster than daytime because traffic is lower. You get a truck number and driver name the moment dispatch routes the call, and you can call back any time for a live status update while you wait.
Do you charge extra for overnight, weekends, or holidays?
No. The rate quoted on the phone is the rate on the invoice regardless of time of day, day of the week, or holiday. We staff 24/7/365 on purpose so that overnight and weekend calls are part of the normal operation, not an exception we charge a surcharge for. National roadside networks sometimes add after-hours surcharges when they subcontract to local operators; we don't, because we are the local operator.
How do I pay, and will I get a receipt?
We accept every major credit card, Apple Pay, Google Pay, Zelle for established customers, and cash. The driver processes payment on scene before leaving, and the itemized receipt emails to you within minutes. For fleet accounts we bill net-30 on a consolidated monthly invoice. For insurance claim tows where your policy covers the service, we direct-bill the carrier and your out-of-pocket is zero. Receipts include the truck number, driver, odometer readings, and itemized line items for your records or insurance submission.
Why Choose Us for Gas Delivery
NYC has plenty of options for gas delivery — national roadside networks, light-pole flyer operators, and local shops. We're the licensed local operator those networks subcontract to when they do the job right. When you call us directly, you skip the dispatch markup and the subcontractor chain. Faster response, lower rate, cleaner execution.
Our drivers are W-2 employees, not gig workers. They train on every common vehicle platform — conventional cars, AWD and 4WD, EVs with manufacturer-spec procedures, motorcycles with proper flatbed technique, low-clearance luxury cars, and heavy commercial vehicles. The right truck shows up the first time.
Flat-rate pricing quoted on the phone before dispatch. NYC DCWP licensed. Commercial auto, garage liability, and on-hook insurance on every truck and every load. No NYC surcharge, no after-hours markup, no storage fees on same-day drops. Receipts emailed before the truck leaves the scene.
Where in NYC Gas Delivery Happens Most
Gas delivery calls cluster on the highways and the bridges — FDR Drive, West Side Highway, Belt Parkway, LIE, BQE, Cross Bronx, and the approaches to JFK, LGA, and Newark. Residential curb calls are rare because drivers don't typically run out on residential streets (there's usually a station within a few blocks). Tunnel and bridge approach calls are our most time-sensitive because of Port Authority and NYPD coordination requirements.
We dispatch to every neighborhood in the five boroughs, but these are the areas where we run gas delivery calls most often. Click any to see our full gas delivery service in that neighborhood, or call (212) 470-4068 for dispatch right now.
Gas Delivery Pricing
Flat-rate, quoted on the phone before dispatch. See full pricing page.
Roadside Assistance
Battery, tire, lockout, gas delivery, and winch-out — dispatched from trucks already in your borough.
Related Services We Handle Too
Gas Delivery calls often overlap with these services. If your situation shifts mid-call, dispatch re-routes without you having to start over.
Roadside Assistance
24/7 Help When You're Stuck
Full roadside service — battery, tire, lockout, gas, winch-out — dispatched from trucks already in your borough. No waiting for a subcontractor.
Learn More →
Flat Tire Change / Tire Service
Spare Mounted or Plug / Patch
We mount your spare, or plug a nail-hole tire on the spot if the damage is in the tread. Shoulder of the BQE is not where you should be changing a tire.
Learn More →
Jump Start / Dead Battery
We'll Get You Running in Minutes
Dead battery on a cold morning or after lights left on overnight. We arrive, test, jump, and confirm the alternator is charging before we leave.
Learn More →
Mobile Mechanic & On-Site Minor Repairs
Fix It Where You're Stuck, Skip the Tow
Sometimes the problem isn't a tow away — it's a cable terminal, a blown fuse, a coolant hose, or a sensor you can swap on the curb. Our roadside mechanics carry common parts and basic tools. If we can fix it on scene, you don't pay for a tow.
Learn More →
Also in Roadside Assistance
Roadside Assistance
24/7 Help When You're Stuck
Full roadside service — battery, tire, lockout, gas, winch-out — dispatched from trucks already in your borough. No waiting for a subcontractor.
Learn More →
Jump Start / Dead Battery
We'll Get You Running in Minutes
Dead battery on a cold morning or after lights left on overnight. We arrive, test, jump, and confirm the alternator is charging before we leave.
Learn More →
Battery Replacement / Delivery
New Battery Delivered & Installed
If the battery is toast, we deliver and install a new one on the spot. Common group sizes stocked on every truck. No trip to the shop.
Learn More →
Flat Tire Change / Tire Service
Spare Mounted or Plug / Patch
We mount your spare, or plug a nail-hole tire on the spot if the damage is in the tread. Shoulder of the BQE is not where you should be changing a tire.
Learn More →
Lockout Service
Keys Locked Inside? We'll Get You In
Keys locked in the car — or keys still in the ignition. We unlock without damaging door seals, window frames, or weatherstripping.
Learn More →
Winch-Out / Off-Road Recovery
Stuck in Snow, Mud, or a Ditch
Car stuck in a snowbank, a pothole, a flooded street, or off-pavement. We winch it out without dragging it across curbs and sidewalks.
Learn More →
Winter Snow Extraction
Stuck in a Snowbank, Alternate-Side Plowed In, or Iced Over
NYC snow creates specific problems: plowed-in on alternate-side days, stuck at the end of an unplowed side street, or frozen solid to the curb. We bring winches, chains, and shovels — not just a strap.
Learn More →
Mobile Mechanic & On-Site Minor Repairs
Fix It Where You're Stuck, Skip the Tow
Sometimes the problem isn't a tow away — it's a cable terminal, a blown fuse, a coolant hose, or a sensor you can swap on the curb. Our roadside mechanics carry common parts and basic tools. If we can fix it on scene, you don't pay for a tow.
Learn More →
Other Services We Run
Light-Duty Towing
Cars, Sedans & Small SUVs
Standard tow service for cars, sedans, and compact SUVs across all five boroughs. Flat-rate pricing, 20–40 minute arrival, no mystery fees.
Learn More →
Motorcycle Towing
Flatbed & Chocked Transport
Motorcycles hauled on flatbed with proper tie-downs and front-wheel chock. No strapping through the handlebars, no damage to fairings.
Learn More →
Heavy-Duty Towing
Trucks, Vans & Large SUVs
Large trucks, box trucks, vans, and oversized SUVs. Heavy wreckers with the booms, winches, and axle ratings to do it right.
Learn More →
Flatbed Towing
Luxury, AWD, EV & Long-Distance
Flatbed is mandatory for AWD, EVs, luxury cars with low ground clearance, and anything going more than a few miles. All four wheels off the ground, zero drivetrain stress.
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Accident Recovery & Collision Towing
Post-Crash Scene Management
Post-collision recovery with scene management, debris cleanup, and direct drop to your insurance-approved body shop. We work with every major carrier.
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Long Distance Towing
Out-of-State & Interstate Transport
Long-haul transport on flatbed to anywhere in the Northeast corridor — upstate NY, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts. Flat-rate quoted up front.
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Need Gas Delivery Right Now?
24/7 dispatch. Flat-rate pricing. 20–40 minute typical arrival. 200++ neighborhoods across all 5 boroughs.